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Journal of Petrology 2007 48(9):1813-1840; doi:10.1093/petrology/egm040
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Geochemistry of Cretaceous Magmatism in Eastern Cuba: Recycling of North American Continental Sediments and Implications for Subduction Polarity in the Greater Antilles Paleo-arc

Claudio Marchesi1,2,*, Carlos J. Garrido1,2, Delphine Bosch3, Joaquín A. Proenza4, Fernando Gervilla1,2, Patrick Monié5 and Antonio Rodríguez-Vega6

1Departamento De Mineralogía Y Petrología, Facultad De Ciencias, Universidad De Granada, 18002 Granada, Spain
2Instituto Andaluz De Ciencias De La Tierra, Facultad De Ciencias, Universidad De Granada-Csic, 18002 Granada, Spain
3Géosciences Montpellier, équipe Manteau-Noyau, Umr 5243, Cnrs-Université Montpellier Ii, 34095 Montpellier, France
4Departament De Cristal·lografia, Mineralogia I Dipòsits Minerals, Facultat De Geologia, Universitat De Barcelona, 08028 Barcelona, Spain
5Géosciences Montpellier, équipe Lithosphère, Umr 5243, Cnrs-Université Montpellier Ii, 34095 Montpellier, France
6Departamento De Geología, Instituto Superior Minero-Metalúrgico, 83320 Moa, Holguín, Cuba

RECEIVED SEPTEMBER 21, 2006; ACCEPTED JUNE 29, 2007


   Abstract

We present whole-rock major- and trace-element and Nd–Sr–Pb radiogenic isotope data for Cretaceous igneous suites from eastern Cuba. These rocks are related to the Greater Antilles paleo-island arc magmatism and have three different igneous styles. Group 1 consists of tholeiitic basalts and rare basaltic andesites that have normal mid-ocean ridge basalt (N-MORB)-like compositions similar to those found in back-arc basin basalts (TiO2 = 1·2–2·9 wt%; La/Yb(N) = 0·7–0·9, Th/Nb = 0·06–0·08, and initial 208Pb/ 204Pb = 37·65–37·74). Group 2 comprises basaltic and rare basaltic andesitic subvolcanic dykes with major- and trace-element and isotopic compositions similar to those of island arc tholeiites (TiO2 = 0·7–1·4 wt%; La/Yb(N) = 0·6–0·9, Th/Nb = 0·06–0·68, and initial 208Pb/ 204Pb = 37·74–38·25). Group 3 is composed of low-Ti (TiO2 = 0·3–0·9 wt%) calcalkaline igneous rocks that have an unambiguous subduction-related character (La/Yb(N) = 1·1–5·0, Th/Nb = 0·35–1·55, and initial 208Pb/ 204Pb = 37·94–38·39). The parental magmas of the three groups formed by variable melting degrees (< 5–25%) of spinel lherzolite, with more depleted mantle sources for Groups 2 and 3 than Group 1. The trace-element and radiogenic isotope compositions of primitive Group 3 samples are strongly bimodal. One subgroup of samples is characterized by low Ta/Yb (0·02–0·03) and Th/La (0·10–0·13), slightly subchondritic Nb/Ta (13·3–17·3), and relatively high initial 206Pb/204Pb (18·57–18·62) and {varepsilon}Nd (7·6–9·4). The remaining primitive Group 3 samples have higher Ta/Yb (0·06–0·11) and Th/La (0·24–0·32), and highly subchondritic Nb/Ta (7·6–9·1), coupled with lower initial 206Pb/204Pb (18·24–18·29) and {varepsilon}Nd (3·4–5·5). These signatures were induced by two distinct slab components that mainly reflect the contributions of Cretaceous Atlantic marine and North American continental sediments, respectively. Nb/Ta in the first subgroup was influenced by melting of rutile-bearing subducted crust, whereas in the second it was inherited from recycled continental sediments. The involvement of Atlantic and North American sediments in Cuban Cretaceous magmatism indicates that the Proto-Caribbean (North American-Proto Atlantic) lithosphere subducted beneath the Greater Antilles arc during the Late Cretaceous (pre-Campanian), consistent with geotectonic models involving onset of SW-dipping subduction beneath the Greater Antilles paleo-arc during the Aptian. The variable mantle source depletion and magnitude of the subduction component probably reflect different settings across the arc, from the arc front to a back-arc spreading ridge.

KEY WORDS: eastern Cuba; Greater Antilles paleo-island arc; mantle source depletion; Nb/Ta fractionation; slab component


*Corresponding author. Present address: Departamento de Mineralogía y Petrología, Facultad de Ciencias, Avenida Fuentenueva s/n, 18002 Granada, Spain. Telephone: + 34 958 248535. Fax: +34 958 243368. E-mail: claudio{at}ugr.es


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